Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Passing/Specifty A Property In Generic Method?

I am trying to move some code that I wrote to a more generic method. While the method is longer, the part I am having trouble with is the following :

public static void Test()

{    
           MyObjectType[] list1 = ListMyObjectTypeMethod1();
            MyObjectType[] list2 = ListMyObjectTypeMethod2();

            List<MyObjectType> linqAblelist1 = new List<MyObjectType>(list1);
            List<MyObjectType> linqAblelist2 = new List<MyObjectType>(list2);

            IEnumerable<MyObjectType> toBeAdded = linqAblelist1.Where(x => linqAblelist2.All(y => y.Property1 != x.Property1));
            IEnumerable<MyObjectType> toBeDeleted = linqAblelist2.Where(a => linqAblelist1.All(b => b.Property1 != a.Property1));

}

And I am trying to pass in a generic type for MyObjectType, but where I have [How To Set Property Here?] how does one specify that in a parameter for the method?

public static void Test<T>(T[] x, T[] y)
        {
            List<T> list1 = new List<T>(x);
            List<T> list2 = new List<T>(y);
            IEnumerable<T> toBeAdded = list1.Where(x => list2.All(y => y.[How To Set Property Here?] != x.[How To Set Property Here?]));
            IEnumerable<T> toBeDeleted = list2.Where(a => list1.All(b => b.[How To Set Property Here?])); != a.[How To Set Property Here?]));));

        }
like image 289
user3010406 Avatar asked Nov 19 '13 20:11

user3010406


2 Answers

Pass in the selection of the property as a Func<T, TProperty>:

public static void Test<T, TProperty>(T[] x, T[] y, Func<T, TProperty> propertySelector)
    {
        List<T> list1 = new List<T>(x);
        List<T> list2 = new List<T>(y);
        IEnumerable<T> toBeAdded = list1.Where(x => list2.All(y => !propertySelector(y).Equals(propertySelector(x))));
        IEnumerable<T> toBeDeleted = list2.Where(a => !list1.All(b => propertySelector(b).Equals(propertySelector(a))));

    }

Then you can call it by specifying a lambda expression for propertySelector:

Test(someArray, someOtherArray, t => t.SomeProperty);
like image 168
Anders Abel Avatar answered Sep 28 '22 19:09

Anders Abel


The best option is to introduce a generic type constraint that will make sure T either inherits from a specific class or implements an interface. In either case the class or interface have to declare Property1. E.g. like this:

public static void Test<T>(T[] x, T[] y) where T : IHasProperty1
{
    …
}
like image 45
Ondrej Tucny Avatar answered Sep 28 '22 20:09

Ondrej Tucny